I won't violate the NDA, so I will only refer to public information as I attempt to disprove this rumor.
iOS 5 has several new features that are announced and relevant to developers. These were made public at the WWDC keynote. For instance, News Stand and iCloud have developer APIs.
The iPhone 5 will, if history is a guide, be running iOS 5. Generally new hardware requires the latest operating system.
Therefore, in order to have iOS 5 compatible apps, on the day that iOS 5 ships, Apple will have to open up submission for iOS 5 apps to developers some period of time in advance of when iOS 5 actually ships... so that the new apps, and the rush of revised apps, can get thru review.
In the past when that happened, places like macrumors, et. al. announced it.
So, whether the iPhone 5 will ship in 14 days or not depends on whether you think Apple will give developers at least 14 days to submit their iOS 5 compatible applications before shipping... or not, and whether you believe the lack of public reports that Apple has opened submissions for iOS 5 compatible apps is an indication that Apple hasn't yet done so.
Also, I was once accosted in a restaurant by a customer service rep for Verizon, a couple years before the iPhone came to verizon. He saw my iPod touch, assumed it was an iPhone and felt compelled to let me in on his inside information about when the next iPhone was going to ship. I knew he was wrong, I knew that Apple wouldn't announce it until WWDC, but what's the point in arguing with him? He felt like an insider because he worked for Verizon, so let him feel that way. But I think that low level customer facing employees at these carriers may not have the greatest jobs and may feel that they are privy to more special information than they actually are. We've often heard these kinds of rumors in the past....
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[ 4.1 ms ] story [ 30.6 ms ] threadiOS 5 has several new features that are announced and relevant to developers. These were made public at the WWDC keynote. For instance, News Stand and iCloud have developer APIs.
The iPhone 5 will, if history is a guide, be running iOS 5. Generally new hardware requires the latest operating system.
Therefore, in order to have iOS 5 compatible apps, on the day that iOS 5 ships, Apple will have to open up submission for iOS 5 apps to developers some period of time in advance of when iOS 5 actually ships... so that the new apps, and the rush of revised apps, can get thru review.
In the past when that happened, places like macrumors, et. al. announced it.
So, whether the iPhone 5 will ship in 14 days or not depends on whether you think Apple will give developers at least 14 days to submit their iOS 5 compatible applications before shipping... or not, and whether you believe the lack of public reports that Apple has opened submissions for iOS 5 compatible apps is an indication that Apple hasn't yet done so.
Also, I was once accosted in a restaurant by a customer service rep for Verizon, a couple years before the iPhone came to verizon. He saw my iPod touch, assumed it was an iPhone and felt compelled to let me in on his inside information about when the next iPhone was going to ship. I knew he was wrong, I knew that Apple wouldn't announce it until WWDC, but what's the point in arguing with him? He felt like an insider because he worked for Verizon, so let him feel that way. But I think that low level customer facing employees at these carriers may not have the greatest jobs and may feel that they are privy to more special information than they actually are. We've often heard these kinds of rumors in the past....
"He felt like an insider because he worked for Verizon, so let him feel that way."
Whilst I too wouldn't have said anything, it's interesting to consider the number of people he may have said this to in the course of his work...
...Who then may have changed their buying intentions based on this false information.
In their acquisition plans, AT&T has announced that T-Mobile's 3G frequencies are going away:
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D9M3LNPO0
It seems silly to produce a 3G smartphone for the T-Mobile frequencies in this case.